“Libraries as common denominator: from the citizen, country and global perspective”
1. V5 3-10-08
LIBRARIES AS COMMON DENOMINATOR:
FROM THE CITIZEN, COUNTRY AND GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE
A PAPER PREPARED BY PENNY CARNABY
NATIONAL LIBRARIAN AND CEO OF THE NATIONAL LIBRARY OF NEW
ZEALAND
BRIDGING WORLDS 2008 CONFERENCE
NLB SINGAPORE OCTOBER 2008
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2. LIBRARIES AS COMMON DENOMINATOR:
FROM THE CITIZEN, COUNTRY AND GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE
Māori welcome
Kōkiri, kōkiri, kōkiri! The message from the people
Whakarongo ake au ki ngā reo o te motu Clearly asks us
E karanga mai ana To open our doors
Huakina mai ngā tatau o tō whare So that we may work together
Kia Mahi Tahi tatou, kia inu ai mātou And share the information
I Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa Held in Te Puna Mātauranga o Aotearoa
Introduction
Slide 1
Title page with Kiwi
It is a great pleasure to be talking to you all today on a topic which I think is
images and topic
truly exciting for libraries of all sorts. It does not matter whether the
communities we serve are large or small, rural or urban, based in our
smallest schools or in our most prestigious research institutions, in small
communities of a few hundred people, or city states of over 4 million people
such as Singapore. The digital world we are in at present is a magnificent
period of transformation for us all. The potential for revolutionising libraries
in the communities we serve has never been more compelling and the
opportunities are extraordinary. But here is the rub. Are we as a profession
up to seizing the moment that the digital age affords us? Are we reading the
opportunities and seeing the convergence opportunities quickly enough?
The answer is mixed and it is the larger, more traditional libraries where I
think the real shake-up needs to happen. To illustrate my concern I am
going to take a helicopter view of the knowledge landscape in my own
country New Zealand. What changes are we seeing in our local
communities, across the nation? How are we interacting with the global
marketplaces and interacting with a blurring of cultural boundaries
internationally? Do we see this blurring as a threat or as an opportunity for
dialogue in diversity? For this audience, a library-centric view has been
taken. Some concerns are raised cautioning libraries who choose to remain
siloed in their approach to the digital world about the potential risk of
reducing their impact.
We are in a world of convergence, connectivity and collaboration. It is an
environment of mashups and synergies, a world that is reshaping, reusing
content and knowledge which we once thought to be sacrosanct.
Collaboration is the name of the game and we need to become superbly
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3. good at networking across traditional boundaries and working together in
ways that were unimaginable only 5 years ago. We need to recognise that
there are also some softer people skills underpinning this knowledge
revolution of which we are all part. It is not all the hard technology –
‘widgets and wires’ - that challenges us. In a way technology solutions are
the easy bit. It is the fundamental cultural change with the library
profession that will be the tough bit for us – we need to rise to the challenge
and let go of the need to control the new knowledge equation - AND (there
is always an AND these days!), we need to continue to protect an
individual’s or organisation’s intellectual property, their ideas and
creativity, in a way that respects their wishes (including, for example, by the
use of Creative Commons licences). These are big issues for us, so please
fasten your seatbelts, ladies and gentlemen - we are about to take a very fast
journey overlooking the knowledge landscape of a country, my country,
with its communities and individual citizens. We will also see how a nation
interacts with global market places and gets international recognition of its
ideas, creativity, culture, national identity and economic contribution.
About New Zealand
Slide 2
Picture of NZ I like comparing New Zealand and Singapore because we are very alike in
from Alia 2006 so many ways AND (there is that and again) so wonderfully different!
Certainly our population size is directly comparable; both countries have
just over 4 million people. We can think “all of country” in a way many
other nations cannot. We can also entertain digital policy on a national
scale, and here New Zealand’s digital policy may be relevant to Singapore
as well.
Of course there are many differences as well. Our economies have different
drivers and geographically we are complete opposites with Singapore a
compact city-state with high population density (from a Kiwi perspective!)
while New Zealand is geographically spread out with alpine topography in
the south, and volcanic regions and vast forests in the north. The
population is distributed into two or three largish cities – with our economy
driven by agriculture and primary production, with dairy, sheep and wine
some of the larger industries. The geographical isolation of some of our
communities presents us with some fundamental challenges and
opportunities in the digital age.
1. Libraries as a common denominator
A country perspective
In the New Zealand context, it makes sense to start with a country
perspective because the policy around our digital strategy has clearly had a
very strong influence on the way we have positioned our thinking in relation
to both local and international endeavours in a digital environment. Of
course, for this audience I will take a library-centric view: libraries as
common denominator. I love telling the story of New Zealand’s Digital
Strategy because the Libraries of New Zealand have made such a strong
contribution to its development, especially the Library and Information
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4. Slide 3
3 C’s
Association of New Zealand Aotearoa (LIANZA). Back in 1999 the
Association had begun thinking about a National Information Strategy for
New Zealand. The three components of a knowledge led society in the
digital world were thought to be what we now refer to as the 3 “C’s”
Connection: ubiquitous ‘all you can eat’ broadband
Content: being strategic about what you pu in the broadband pipes
t
Confidence: trusted systems and people confident and skilled to
take an active part in the digital world.
The National Library, as a central government department, was in a position
to influence directly the shape of the Digital Strategy, working closely with
the Ministries of Economic Development, Education, Culture, Labour,
Treasury, and other departments.
New Zealand’s Digital Strategy was launched in May 2005. It is a strategy
Slide 4
which touches all parts of New Zealand society, connecting businesses,
NZ Digital Strategy
community and government. What is worth noticing is that the 3 “C’s”
framework is very applicable to every library no matter how small or large.
Importantly, the New Zealand Government has just completed extensive
Slide 5 consultation on a refresh of the 2005 Digital Strategy: ‘Digital Strategy
New slide 2.0’, launched in August 2008, endorses the fundamentals of the 3 “C’s”,
Digitise Digital however a fourth “C” has been added – collaboration. In a sense, it is
Strategy 2.0 overlay through extensive collaboration that New Zealanders will reap the benefit of
collaboration the digital age and bridge the worlds of knowing, sharing and learning as a
nation.
Before leaving one country’s response to the digital world I want to draw to
your attention another crucial all-of-country policy development led by the
Slide 6 National Library of New Zealand on behalf of the New Zealand
NZ Digital Government. In September last year New Zealand’s Digital Content
Content Strategy Strategy (NZDCS) was launched. This strategy fleshed out the importance
of the second “C” in the Digital Strategy : content. The NZDCS raises
awareness of the need for a country to be strategic about how it fills the
broadband pipes especially in relation to the New Zealand digital assets,
particularly those which will grow New Zealand’s businesses and push New
Zealand ideas into global market-places.
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5. Figure 1
Slide figure 1 Some aspects of the theoretical framework on which NZDCS is based have
special resonance for libraries and for the Bridging Worlds theme of this
conference. The Digital Content Strategy - bridging the worlds of different
cultural and philosophical views and disciplines - acknowledges that there
exists both formal and informal content. Firstly, formal content, as
libraries know so well, is content which is authoritative, scholarly,
authentic: content which we trust and whose provenance we know.
Importantly for libraries, the Strategy also acknowledges the importance of
informal knowledge systems as well, particularly the anarchic world of
Web 2.0. The world of mashups, blogs, wikis, YouTube of citizen-created
content – a world all very unpredictable, incredibly important and
fantastically creative. It is what is now being referred to as the new public
civic space. This has been a new world for librarians to embrace and
understand. This is the world that many of the papers will address at this
conference. What the NZDCS does is to place the opportunities and
challenges of Web 2.0 within a national policy framework.
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6. Slide Figure 2 Another aspect of NZDCS which has excited international interest is the
end-to-end view New Zealand has taken of digital content. Not only does
the NZDCS emphasise the importance of creating content (especially New
Zealand content) but also the need to access and discover this content
more easily. Importantly, it illustrates how we need to protect and preserve
these digital assets so they may realise economic benefits through re-use and
re-engagement for the generation of new thought, ideas and argument and so
they may remain preserved and accessible for cultural and social reasons
over time.
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7. Figure 3 New Zealand Digital Content Strategy
www.digitalcontent.govt.nz
One final comment on the importance of a countrywide approach to Digital
Content relates to funding. The NZDCS came with considerable new
government funding for broadband (connectivity) initiatives and Community
Partnership projects (content and confidence). Through this funding source
we have been able to unleash some extraordinary innovation and creativity
as a country. You will get a glimpse of this tomorrow when Joann Ransom
talks about the citizen-led creativity revolution in the Horowhenua district in
the North Island of New Zealand. Here is a glimpse of what to expect:
PLAY VIDEO CLIP OF JOANN RANSOM
So now let’s get practical. You have followed my comments on all the
policy and strategy initiatives, taking New Zealand as an example of how
one bi-cultural – and increasingly multicultural - country is bridging the
worlds of content, connectivity, collaboration and confidence in a digital
environment. Now let’s go to the individual citizen, the community and see
what is happening. Remember the construct of the 4 “C’s” : they are really
important.
2. Libraries as a common denominator
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8. From a citizen’s and community viewpoint
New slide
collaboration Earlier I talked about the 4th “C” in New Zealand’s renewed Digital Strategy
2.0 (September 2008) : Collaboration.
Collaboration has been the name of the game with New Zealand libraries for
some time now, and we are actually getting really good at it!
So where were we before the NZDCS and the Digital Strategy’s Community
Partnership funding?
In many ways probably we were, like most countries, producing wonderful
ideas, at an individual and community level but it was not joined up, scaled,
accessible nor did we realise either the economic or cultural benefit of ideas
creation and the generation of new knowledge.
A uniquely New Zealand metaphor of a ‘kete’ (or basket) of knowledge has
Ketes unconnected been used to help to describe the problem we were trying to solve. There
were baskets of knowledge but they were largely at the cottage industry
stage – good in their own right, but nowhere near delivering a joined-up
knowledge infrastructure for the country.
Several interventions at government level relevant to libraries have had an
extraordinary impact on bridging the worlds, not only of New Zealand’s
libraries, but also across government, business, and community generally,
including GLAMs (the Galleries, Libraries, Archives, Museums sectors),
education, health, research, geospatial and statistics sectors.
For the NLNZ, it started well before the NZDCS was launched. A
NDHA $24million government grant (a great deal in NZ terms!) to the NLNZ has
funded the National Library to build a trusted preservation repository (the
National Digital Heritage Archive (NDHA)), the first stage of which goes
live in two weeks time. All very exciting. The archive will protect and
preserve digital images, moving images, sound and textual content across
New Zealand’s society.
Of course the NDHA has the potential to be far more than a solution which
meets the National Library of New Zealand’s mandate obligations under the
National Library Act. It has the potential to preserve significant areas of NZ
digital assets and protect digital assets of all kinds, including geospatial,
broadcasting, moving image, sound and textual content.
Right now we are looking at an all-of-Government approach to digital
continuity – and the NDHA will contribute significantly to solving this very
challenging issue. I will return to this issue later in this paper because it is a
crucial component of bridging very different digital worlds.
Referring back to the end-to-end view of digital content I mentioned earlier,
we are beginning to bridge the gap between the creation of NZ’s digital
assets on one hand and the need to protect and preserve these content
assets in perpetuity both for economic reasons and for cultural and social
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9. reasons, so they will remain available to New Zealanders via the web (or
whatever will have taken its place) in 50 or 100 years time.
Of course we have all lost important data and content – everyone you talk to
really understands the need to protect and preserve but very few countries
have a strategy for doing so.
What content should we create, discover, preserve and protect at a
national level?
Now we return to earlier comments about the view the NZDCS strategy is
taking in relation to formal and informal NZ content assets.
What we are trying to do is ‘join up’ NZ content into one connected
Google-like view of content in NZ. We want to bridge the world’s silos of
existing content assets.
Let me give you some examples relevant to libraries. Remember, we are
tyring to ‘connect the ketes’ of NZ or the baskets of digital knowledge.
As we know, the formal authoritative knowledge systems are well known to
libraries and relatively straightforward. In simple terms, all we need to do is
bridge the divide between one data source and another and make it
discoverable. Our solution is to use OAI-compliant metadata harvesting
services delivered by the NLNZ to ‘hoover up’ the metadata presented
across varied content environments and make this content accessible,
discoverable through google-like interfaces. Sounds simple doesn’t it!
Technically it is, however without collaboration (the human factor) it just
wouldn’t be possible.
Here are some examples:
KRIS (Kiwi Research Information Service) draws together NZ’s publicly-
funded research output into a discoverable service. New Zealand’s eight
universities are the major contributors to the KRIS service, along with
Crown Research Institutes and Polytechnics active in research. The service
is supported by the crucial parent bodies: the NZ Vice-Chancellors
Committee (NZVCC), and the Institutes of Technology and Polytechnics of
New Zealand (ITPNZ).
Matapihi - Matapihi is now four years old and showcased the GLAMs
online. Matapihi is Māori for window, so it is the window into the
collections from GLAMs in NZ. Matapihi is an initiative of the National
Digital Forum (NDF), which is an alliance of some 120 GLAMs in NZ.
EPIC (Electronic Periodicals in Collaboration) is a collaborative purchasing
agreement among the libraries of NZ, bringing some 16,000 full text
journals to every citizen through the libraries of NZ.
These are some examples of collaborative initiatives in the Library and
Information sector delivering formal authoritative content nationally to all
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10. Kiwis. Remember I am only taking a library-centric view for this paper:
there are other perspectives that could be explored..
What about a national focus on community-generated content?
This is where the real challenge and opportunity exists for NZ libraries. I
Kete don’t need to tell this audience of the extraordinary explosion of creativity
and citizen-generated content which has been possible in the Web 2.0
environment. It is a wonderful extension of the formal and authoritative
knowledge systems that librarians are so used to. But are we taking it
seriously? How are we protecting and preserving content created by
individuals and communities so that it can later be discovered? We know
how to deal with the formal content but what about the somewhat more
anarchic citizen-created assets?
Here the NZ story gets really exciting. This is where Joann Ransom will be
talking to you about Kete, so I won’t elaborate here, other than to say Kete
is a wonderful concept which liberates community-generated content and
gives it wings.
The problem we are trying to resolve is how to scale up Ketes across the
country so that citizen-generated content is legitimised and sits alongside the
formal knowledge systems.
To a large degree this issue will be resolved through the continuing rollout
APN of the Aotearoa People Network (APN) which by the end of this year will
include some 75 rural public libraries across NZ. This initiative is
government-funded and run by the National Library of New Zealand. The
aspect of the APN which I wish to draw to your attention to is the open
source community repositories or Ketes that will be part of each community.
Each will have access to creative commons licenses so that ownership and
use can be determined if the content creator wishes to do so. The result is
bound to be an unprecedented liberation of community stories from across
the country. As we all know, the Web 2.0 environment is anarchic,
uncontrollable, and very very creative. Importantly, Ketes can be part of
any community or marae, so libraries are just one example of the
possibilities here. This is our current solution to bridging the formal and
informal worlds of digital content in New Zealand.
So how does this all get joined up at a national level?
Digital NZ The NZDCS has supported a concept called Digital New Zealand (DNZ) to
connect New Zealand contact from a multitude of places. Essentially DNZ
is the ‘glue’ in the NZDCS. It uses open internationally adopted metadata
standards to ensure greater interoperability across sectors, content formats
and communities of interest.
By the end of November this year, the DNZ exemplar will be online,
demonstrating how a national all-of-country approach to joining up formal,
informal, public and private content can be achieved. It crosses boundaries
of sectors, businesses and government, and shows how New Zealanders and
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11. the rest of the world can access and discover NZ content, thought and ideas.
Digital New Zealand will connect New Zealanders to information important
to all aspects of their lives, and push New Zealand’s digital assets into
global market-places as well as raising international awareness of New
Zealand culture, thought and identity. Digital New Zealand also has
strategic importance: it answers the concern that if Kiwis don’t take action
to discover, protect and preserve NZ digital assets, then who will? Digital
New Zealand will of course use Web 2.0 principles and provide the
opportunity for individuals to interact in their own creative digital spaces
where content will be used and re-imagined.
Importantly, the DNZ takes citizen-created content seriously as well, and we
anticipate the NDHA mentioned earlier will be a solution to protecting and
preserving citizen-generated content alongside New Zealand’s official born-
digital content. It is a very joined-up view of New Zealand digital content
we are seeing here.
3. Libraries as common denominator: an international perspective
Before concluding, I want to make some comments about how libraries are
making an international contribution as well. As we know, libraries have
been early adopters of international knowledge networks and global content
generally.
OCLC is a good example, with Worldcat for example connecting the rich
collections of some 47,000 of the world’s libraries.
Scholarly publishing is taking new forms as well, using both formal and
informal models of communication, and libraries are well used to being the
bridge between content seekers and the content sources that will satisfy their
search.
In recent times, National Libraries have been getting very joined up as well,
and bridging regional and cultural boundaries. We are seeing massive
collaborative regional projects emerge. In Europe for example The
European Library (TEL) and Europeana are interesting models.
This year in Quebec City the Conference of Directors of National Libraries
NLGlobal (CDNL) explored their vision for a Global Digital Library. The National
Libraries of Singapore, Canada, Australia and New Zealand developed a
prototype called ‘National Libraries Global’ to see how feasible it would be
to join up National Libraries’ digital collections, potentially bringing
together all the cultures of the world into one discoverable experience.
Library professionals of course know that Google just doesn’t cut it when
you are seeking to mine the deep web. The example of DNZ is a good one
to illustrate just how much rich content never reaches the Google lens.
Whether you take a local, national or international viewpoint, libraries have
the responsibility to collaborate as never before, not only with other libraries
but also with the commercial, government and other communities of interest
we work alongside to mine rich content important to us all.
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12. There are other bridges that need building, between cultures, faiths and
civilisations. We in NZ are building bridges between our two founding
cultures – Polynesian and European – using our two official languages. We
believe libraries can and do play an important role in this work, both in our
country and internationally.
Concluding thoughts:
Final slide It is a very joined-up world we are in. Today we know how to connect the
drawing together knowledge silos or cottage industries using the data rich national standards
other slides and interoperability frameworks which are emerging. Access strategies
draw on fundamental methods of managing information and our
professional expertise in doing so.
Libraries and librarians are getting better at bridging the digital gaps but are
we prepared to take a new-generation view of our profession?
The NZ examples given have largely been imagined, driven and led through
the library and information sector. Initiatives to address the complex issue
of preserving digital assets over time are also largely being led by the library
and archives sectors internationally.
The Web 2.0 environment has transformed libraries as we know them, into
creative civic spaces where citizens have balanced the power equation very
quickly between the informal anarchic web and the formal and authoritative
knowledge systems more familiar to libraries.
The NZ experience has been used to illustrate how ‘doable’ the joined up
digital world is. We can be optimistic that within 3 years we will have a
developed connected and profound knowledge-led framework which will
create a scalable, shareable, sustainable solution for the liberation of NZ
ingenuity on the Web. We predict that it is individual New Zealanders who
will be at the heart of this content creation, and they will use the Web 2.0
environment in, innovative ways for purposes important to them, ways that
we cannot yet foresee.
While libraries are the constant in this knowledge revolution, this is no time
to be complacent. As a profession we need to move at the same speed or
faster than the ‘Google’ generation we are providing services to. It is
transforming our workplace in unimaginable ways. We are bridging new
worlds magnificently in many ways, finding clever new solutions, however
as one gap is bridged, another appears. It is a merged, converged, blurred
environment we are working in, and we need to respond flexibly to take
advantage of this.
We have embraced convergence across previously siloed disciplines, we
have exploited the opportunities offered by the Web 2.0 world. We are
bridging new worlds that were not imagined five years ago. So libraries are
the constant in this techno-knowledge-led revolution we are in. But don’t
you get the feeling that it’s all really just beginning? The really exciting
thing from our perspective is that it is the most knowledge-led creative,
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13. empowering, democratising time we have ever lived in – and in a sense isn’t
that what librarians are all about?
***
Web references:
Aotearoa People’s Network (APN): www.peoplesnetworknz.org.nz
EPIC (Electronic Publications in Collaboration): www.epic.org.nz
KRIS (Kiwi Research Information Service): http://nzresearch.org.nz
LIANZA (Library and Information Association of New Zealand Aotearoa):
www.lianza.org.nz
National Digital Forum (NDF): http://ndf.natlib.govt.nz and Matapihi :
www.matapihi.org.nz/
National Digital Heritage Archive (NDHA): www.natlib.govt.nz/ndha
New Zealand Digital Strategy and Digital Content Strategy:
www.digitalstrategy.govt.nz
The European Library (TEL): www.theeuropeanlibrary.org and Europeana:
www.europeana.eu/
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